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...Quack? In Hidalgo, second county upriver from the Gulf, health authorities got state help for a four-year study by anthropologists and sociologists. Last week, in Hidalgo's county seat of Edinburg, the researchers gave their prescription for dealing with curanderismo: "Don't fight it-join it." To the incredulous M.D.s who heard the report, Study Director William Madsen, a University of Texas anthropologist, explained: Mexican-Americans still reject the germ theory of disease and infection; to them, a raw egg has more healing power than an antibiotic, and a hospital is a place...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: A Cure for Curanderismo | 8/25/1961 | See Source »

During the last glacier age 10,000 to 25,000 years ago, sluggish rivers of Arctic ice created a temporary land crossing between Siberia and Alaska at the Bering Strait. Anthropologists have long agreed that this intercontinental bridge-which vanished when the glaciers melted-was crossed by the earliest known North American settlers, who moved far down the continent in search of game (stone spearheads 100 centuries old were unearthed in Folsom, N. Mex., in 1926). Last week, to the existing evidence of the ice-age migration from Asia, a Columbia University anthropologist added an important new find: the oldest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Camping 10,000 Years Ago | 8/25/1961 | See Source »

Last week there were sure signs that the center had secured a new lease on life with the appointment of its first chancellor: able Anthropologist Alexander Spoehr, 47, director of Honolulu's Bishop Museum and a scholar armed with a deep knowledge of Asia and a firm plan of action for what he calls a challenge "unique in American history...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Awakening in Hawaii | 7/21/1961 | See Source »

...Stage Is Set. Last week the regents completed the center's reorganization with the appointment of Chancellor Spoehr, whom Carnegie President Gardner calls "the best man for the job in Hawaii." Trained at Stanford and Chicago, Anthropologist Spoehr is famed for having enriched a remarkable center of Polynesian artifacts at the Bishop Museum. (One item: a royal cloak left by Kamehameha I that is made of extinct birds' feathers and is now valued at $1,000,000.) Spoehr is also known as a shrewd administrator: he accepted his new $25,000-a-year job only after insisting that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Awakening in Hawaii | 7/21/1961 | See Source »

This gives Author Ian Brook (a pseudonym) plenty of opportunity to rib the retreating Empire right up to No. 10 Downing Street, and to fire deft, satiric shots at everybody from an American anthropologist studying illiteracy among Alabasa's albinos to the new class of boorish, lawyer-bred African politicians ("The Prime Minister of the Colony laughed and picked at the hard skin on the ball of his foot"). Except for a dramatically faulty attempt to give Jimmy a realistic love affair, out of keeping with the otherwise admirably sustained, two-dimensional tone of spoof, Jimmy Riddle emerges...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Short Notices: Jul. 21, 1961 | 7/21/1961 | See Source »

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